Twenty-one years ago, the University of Minnesota, Morris, became the first U.S. public university to draw power from an on-site, industrial-scale wind turbine. It added a second one in 2011. Today, the pair — affectionately known as Bert and Ernie — produce more power each year than the semirural campus consumes.
“It’s windy year-round here in western Minnesota,” said Troy Goodnough, the school’s sustainability director.
Together, Bert and Ernie crank out 10 million kilowatt-hours of electricity annually. According to Goodnough, UMN Morris consumes about half the output and sells the rest to the Otter Tail Power Co., the local investor-owned utility. Now, a first-of-its-kind thermal battery pilot is underway that, if scaled up, could help the campus use more of that juice while reducing the environmental impact of the sprawling methane-powered steam-heat loops that keep it cozy through Minnesota’s bitter winters.
Late last month, technicians from Illinois-based Cache Energy arrived on campus to install the battery unit, which transforms electricity into intense heat. Its outlet temperature can reach 1,000 degrees Fahrenheit — more than hot enough to efficiently run a steam heating system.






